Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
India

Extremely heavy rains due to alignment of three weather systems: Climate scientists

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jul, 2023 10:16 AM
  • Extremely heavy rains due to alignment of three weather systems: Climate scientists

Photo courtesy of ShutterStock

Chandigarh, July 10 (IANS) The ongoing spell of extremely heavy rains, which wreaked havoc in several states, is due to the alignment of three weather systems, said climate scientists on Monday.

Incessant rains have triggered flashfloods and landslides across Himachal Pradesh, while Delhi has recorded the highest rains in the last 40 years. Even most of the areas of Punjab have been witnessing flood-like situation in most of districts.

Both meteorologists and climate scientists have been blaming increasing levels of global warming for a steep increase in extreme weather events.

“The ongoing spell of extremely heavy rains is due to the alignment of three weather systems, western disturbance over western Himalayas, cyclonic circulation over northwestern plains, and axis of monsoon trough running across Indo-Gangetic Plains,” said Mahesh Palawat, Vice-President, Meteorology and Climate Change, Skymet Weather.

This alignment is not happening for the first time and is the usual pattern during the monsoon. However, global warming-led changes in monsoon patterns have made a difference.

“There has been a constant rise in both land and sea temperatures, which has increased the capacity of the air to hold moisture for a longer time. Thus, the role of climate change in the increasing extreme weather events in India has been strengthening with each passing year,” Palawat told IANS.

Several reports and researches have already established the impact of climate change on Indian monsoon patterns. However, it has also been tampering with atmospheric as well oceanic phenomena, which has further multiplied the implications of global warming.

According to Raghu Murtugudde, Earth System Scientist and Visiting Professor at IIT-Bombay, there have been extreme weather events earlier as well, but 2023 has been a unique year.

“Global warming is making a significant contribution but there are some other factors as well. Firstly, El Nino has taken shape, which is amplifying global temperatures. Secondly, wildfires have been in three times larger areas, releasing three times of carbon into the atmosphere, and increasing greenhouse gases.

“Thirdly, North Atlantic Ocean is in a warmer phase. Fourth, the Arabian Sea has warmed unexceptionally since January, infusing more moisture over North, Northwest India. And lastly, the upper-level circulation pattern is also unusual, which forces local surface circulations, bringing rains like the one we are witnessing across north and central India,” Murtugudde explained.

According to the Ministry of Earth Sciences report, ‘Assessment of Climate Change over the Indian Region’, overall monsoonal rainfall is projected to become more intense in future, and to affect larger areas mainly due to the increase in atmospheric moisture content with temperature.

The frequency of localised heavy rain occurrences has significantly increased over central India, which is partly attributed to changes in the availability of moisture due to greenhouse gas-based warming, aerosols, stability of the atmosphere and increasing urbanization.

Global as well as regional models project an increase in seasonal rainfall over India while also projecting a weakening monsoon circulation.

Since the middle of the 20th century, India has witnessed a rise in average temperature; a decrease in monsoon precipitation; a rise in extreme temperature and rainfall events, droughts, and sea levels; and an increase in the intensity of severe cyclones, alongside other changes in the monsoon system.

There is compelling scientific evidence that human activities have influenced these changes in regional climate.

“We all know that both global surface and ocean temperatures have been increasing, resulting in more evaporation. This has aggravated the rain manifold. Indo-Gangetic plains have been receiving lots of moisture from the Bay of Bengal as well as from the Arabian Sea. This continuous supply of moisture feed to the weather systems leads to increased rains, which also results in extreme weather events,” said Krishnan Raghavan, Scientist-G, Director, Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM).

He stressed on the need of research on other global factors that impact circulations affecting Indian weather.

“There is a possibility of another factor known as Arctic amplification. Polar regions have been heating at an alarming rate, leading to glacial ice melt. Due to this, mid-latitude circulation patterns have been affecting atmospheric circulation patterns in mid-latitude and the tropics.

“We need to have more research on this but its contribution cannot be ruled out on changing weather patterns in India.”

The IPCC Report, ‘Weather and Climate Extreme Events in a Changing Climate’ had already warned that summer and monsoon precipitation will also increase and become more frequent.

The Indian sub-continent will have a 20 per cent surge in extreme rainfall events.

The projections suggest that rainfall will become incessant and erratic leading to floods, depressions will intensify into deep depressions, and cyclonic events will become more frequent across eastern and western coasts.

Further, if global warming increases, some compound extreme events, with a low likelihood (of occurrence) in past and current climate, will become more frequent, and there will be a higher likelihood that events with increased intensities, durations and or spatial extents, unprecedented in the observational record, will occur (high confidence).

The warming in the western Indian Ocean is associated with increases in moisture surges on the low-level monsoon westerlies towards the Indian subcontinent, which may lead to an increase in the occurrence of precipitation extremes over central India.

As per the analysis by CEEW, ‘Preparing India for Extreme Climate Events 2020’, the Indian subcontinent has witnessed more than 478 extreme events since 1970 and an acceleration in their frequency after 2005.

MORE India ARTICLES

Lingayat mutt sex scandal: Charges against rape accused seer stand, says K'taka Police

Lingayat mutt sex scandal: Charges against rape accused seer stand, says K'taka Police
Superintendent of Police, Chitradurga, K. Parashurama said that along with the prime accused seer, the charges against accused number two, women's hostel warden Rashmi and accused number four Paramashivaiah are also valid. However, the police are gathering evidence against accused number two, a minor, and accused number five Gangadharaiah, he added.

Lingayat mutt sex scandal: Charges against rape accused seer stand, says K'taka Police

Delhi primary schools to be closed from Saturday due to pollution: Kejriwal

Delhi primary schools to be closed from Saturday due to pollution: Kejriwal
He made the announcement while addressing a joint presser here with his Punjab counterpart Bhagwant Mann.  Kejriwal also said that outdoor activities for all classes above class 5 will also be suspended.

Delhi primary schools to be closed from Saturday due to pollution: Kejriwal

Will make all-out efforts to make paddy straw burning free by next year: Punjab CM

Will make all-out efforts to make paddy straw burning free by next year: Punjab CM
Interacting with the mediapersons here, the Chief Minister, accompanied by his Delhi counterpart Arvind Kejriwal, said the state government is working on a multi-pronged strategy and has already roped in agriculture experts and the farmers unions for working out a viable solution for this problem.

Will make all-out efforts to make paddy straw burning free by next year: Punjab CM

India's metro network currently world's 5th largest: Hardeep Puri

India's metro network currently world's 5th largest: Hardeep Puri
Around 810 km of metro line are operational in 20 cities in the country while more than 980 km of metro network and RRTS is currently under construction in 27 cities, Union Minister for Housing and Urban Affairs Hardeep Puri said on Friday, adding India currently has the fifth-largest metro network in the world.

India's metro network currently world's 5th largest: Hardeep Puri

Centre highlighting stubble burning issue to divert attention: Punjab ministers

Centre highlighting stubble burning issue to divert attention: Punjab ministers
The ministers said according to the data till date many cities of Haryana are in the first 10 cities in the list of the most polluted cities in India, including Hisar, Faridabad, Sirsa, Rohtak, Sonepat and Bhiwani, etc., while from Punjab, no city is in the first 10.

Centre highlighting stubble burning issue to divert attention: Punjab ministers

Shiv Sena leader shot dead outside Amritsar temple, shopkeeper held for crime

Shiv Sena leader shot dead outside Amritsar temple, shopkeeper held for crime
Punjab Police chief Gaurav Yadav said local shopkeeper, Sandeep Singh Sunny, has been arrested for firing at and killing the Shiv Sena leader, while terming the incident as unfortunate.

Shiv Sena leader shot dead outside Amritsar temple, shopkeeper held for crime